(Bible, English). Torah Nevi’im U’kethuvim- The Twenty-Four Books of the Holy Scriptures. Carefully Translated According to the Massoratic Text, After the Best Jewish Authorities and Supplied with Short Explanatory Notes. By ISAAC LEESER

AUCTION 19 | Tuesday, March 11th, 2003 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts and Works of Graphic Art

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Lot 16
(AMERICAN JUDAICA).

(Bible, English). Torah Nevi’im U’kethuvim- The Twenty-Four Books of the Holy Scriptures. Carefully Translated According to the Massoratic Text, After the Best Jewish Authorities and Supplied with Short Explanatory Notes. By ISAAC LEESER

Second edition. Text in English. Printed in two columns pp. iv,1011. Light stains in places, a.e.g. Contemporary gilt-tooled black morocco with central cartouche gilt-tooled with the name “Florence Sax” on upper-cover, spine gilt in compartments, neat repair at lower portion of spine. Thick 4to Singerman 1271; not in Darlow & Moule

Philadelphia: C. Sherman & Son 1858

Est: $600 - $900
PRICE REALIZED $800
Isaac Leeser, a pioneer of American Judaism, published the first Jewish translation of the entire Bible into English to wean American Jews (most of whom could not read Hebrew) away from the King James Version and its Christological interpretations. “In presenting this work to the public, the translator would merely remark, that it is not a new notion by which he was seized of late years which impelled him to the task, but a desire entertained for more than a quarter of a century, since the day he quitted school in his native land to come to this country, to present to his fellow-Israelites an English version, made by one of themselves, of the Holy Word of God.” Leeser’s translation has become the standard Bible for English-speaking Jews, especially in America. It was greeted with acclaim by all circles and continues to be used in synagogues to this day. See J. D. Sarna and N. M. Sarna, The Bible and Bibles in America, in: Jewish Bible Scholarship and Translations in the United States, pp. 84-90; Murray Friedman, Jewish Life in Philadelphia (1983) p.35